Four of Rot

Four of Rot lies on a weathered oak table, its edges curled like dried leaves and the corners softened by damp years. The stock is a dull parchment gray, but the ink ruins the surface with a living sheen—rust-dark sigils that creep along the card as if a slow fire were breathing underneath. The main image shows four pale, knurled branches sprouting from a shadowed core, each twig bearing a tiny, starved bud that never fully opens. A ring of moss-green glaze seals the edges, catching light in dull, oily gleams and leaving a slick, almost whispering touch on the fingertips. The texture feels at once cool and organic, like dry bark brought to life by a damp breath. Old lore clings to the piece as stubbornly as grime to a canal stone: this is a card born from the rot-wary bargains of port towns, rumored to be forged by a witch-merchant who traded with decay itself, a pact-bound artifact that can tilt a moment toward stillness or sudden, creeping power. To those who know its history, the Four of Rot is a hinge and a rumor. It is said to bind decay to desire, to let a clever keeper barter with blight as if it were coin. In the whispered chronicles of the damp coasts, you hear of rot-wardens who used the card to seal a corridor against pestilence or to coax a dying grove back to its disease-slowed life. The four sigils are not merely decoration; they’re an invitation and a warning. When drawn in the right moment, they murmur about famine and regeneration in the same breath, about what a hunger-seeded world will give back if you meet it halfway. In daylight duels or twilight skirmishes, it becomes a compass that points toward patience, toward letting rot do its work while you gather your remaining strength for a counterstroke. Its significance in gameplay is less about flashy violence and more about timing and continuity. The Four of Rot is prized by those who see a longer story unfolding—a card that turns slow, inexorable sequences into leverage. Used well, it seeds a chain reaction: a minor blight that lingers, prompting opponents to overextend, then a quiet recovery for its user as rot’s grip loosens just enough to slip through. It invites a player to think beyond the immediate moment, to read the board as a damp alley where every step leaves a mark and every mark draws a future. It’s not simply a weapon or a shield; it is a narrative device, a reagent in a larger ritual of bargaining and balance. On a bustling quay, the Saddlebag Exchange hums with the day’s trade. There, a broad-shouldered dealer with ink-stained fingers weighs the Four of Rot on a chipped scale, whispering about margins and moods. He notes that pristine copies fetch more, but even a worn card carries a memory, a story others will pay to hear. For a well-timed whisper of a trade, five gold can slide across the counter, with a promise of further barter if rot-scarred lore delights a buyer’s palate. The market breathes with the card, turning rumor into value and value into a new chapter for whoever holds it next. And so the Four of Rot travels, a leaf of decay folded into a future that keeps unrolling, inviting the curious to listen to what rot has to say when given time to speak.

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Minimum Price

115

Historic Price

47.18

Current Market Value

28,980

Historic Market Value

11,889

Sales Per Day

252

Percent Change

143.75%

Current Quantity

530

Average Quantity

784

Avg v Current Quantity

67.6%

Four of Rot : Auctionhouse Listings

Price
Quantity
49,997.0510
5,0002
4,090.53
3,000.923
2,000.922
1,500.692
1,400.6912
1,330.6647
358.5811
35817
3576
3569
352.449
351.441
3506
3401
339.996
339.982
3394
338.899
338.881
33510
3341
333.995
320.645
320.0310
316.836
316.8224
316.8110
316.51
314.515
3004
2973
282.021
280.021
2007
199.998
1994
198.9914
160.999
160.9812
150.981
15014
149.9957
14015
139.39
13911
138.999
125.131
125.0921
121.422
116.422
116.422
1162
11521